The Pulp and Paper Industry

The Pulp and Paper Industry

THE PULP AND PAPER INDUSTRY In New Zealand, paper is made from wood using the "Kraft" process. This is a part mechanical, part chemical process that produces a strong pulp. It has several disadvantages, in terms of complexity and set up costs as well as having a low pulp yield and producing unpleasant-smelling sulfur compounds, but it is still internationally the most widely used pulp and paper process. The manufacturing process is outlined below. Step 1 - Wood preparation The bark is removed from in-coming logs, and these are then chipped. Sometimes, the wood arrives at the plant already chipped, meaning that this step is unnecessary. Step 2 - Cooking The wood chips are heated in a solution of NaOH and Na2S in a pressure cooker, during which time a lot of the lignin (the reinforcing susbstance that make tree cells wood hard and 'woody' rather than soft like those of other plants) is removed from the wood. The pressure is then released suddenly, causing the chips to fly apart into fibres. Step 3 - Pulp washing The pulp is washed with water to wash out the cooking chemicals and lignin from the fibre so that they will not interfere with later process steps. Step 4 - Pulp screening A sieve is used to remove knots and clumped-together uncooked fibres from the pulp. Step 5 - Bleaching This is done in two stages. Firstly the pulp is treated with NaOH in the presence of O2. The NaOH removes hydrogen ions from the lignin and then the O2 breaks down the polymer. Then, the pulp is treated with ClO2 then a mixture of NaOH, O2 and peroxide and finally with ClO2 again to remove the remaining lignin. Step 6 - Paper making The fibres are mechanincally treated to make them bond better to each other (strengthening the paper), chemicals added to provide special properties such as colour or water resistance, and then the water is squeezed out and the pulp is rolled smooth and dried. Various ancilliary processes result in the recovery of CaO, NaOH and Na2S, the major chemicals used in the process. Various utilities ensure that such conditions as sufficient reaction times and adequate mixing are met. On site processing removes the lignin from the liquid wastes, and solid wastes are generally taken to a landfill. Efforts continue to be made to reduce water consumption by recycling, as smaller volumes are easier to process. The most obvious environmental problem continues to be the sulfurous emissions that give Kraft pulping plants their characteristic smell. These are decreased by gas incineration, but are not able to be wholly eliminated. IV-Forestry-C-Pulp and Paper-1 INTRODUCTION Paper is a major product of the forestry industry, and is used widely in our society. Paper products are used not only in their obvious applications in the publishing industry and for writing on, but also in a variety of specialty papers, cardboards, brown papers etc. In addition, various chemicals are produced as a byproduct of the pulp and paper industry (see articles). Paper is made by pulping wood, bleaching this pulp and then spreading it out into sheets to make it into paper. At various stages of the process, chemicals are used to give the paper particular properties, such as the bleaching chemicals that make paper white (and which also enable it to subsequently be coloured). The pulping process that is used in New Zealand is known as "kraft pulping" which relies on a combination of heat, chemicals and mechanical pulping to convert the wood into a smooth, soft pulp suitable for use in paper making. Kraft pulping is the main pulping process (together with mechanical pulping) used today, and is the only one discussed below. The kraft process has several advantages: • It can be used with virtually all wood species • It can easily handle the extractives in most coniferous wood • The pulp has very good strength (the word 'kraft' means 'strong' in Swedish) • The recovery process for the chemicals is well established However, there are also disadvantages: • The pulp yield is quite low at about 45 - 50% • The equipment used for the chemical recovery is extensive and costly to install • Sulphurous compounds, which are odorous in the parts per billion range, are formed in the process • Fairly complicated processes are required for bleaching the pulp Lignin The main component of wood that needs to be removed to turn it into paper is a compound known as lignin. This name refers to a group of chemicals that are essentially three dimensional polymers of trans-coniferol, trans-sinapol and trans-p-coumarol (see below), along with hemicelluloses and aromatic carboxylic acids. Lignin is the reinforcing compound that is deposited on tree cell walls to make the wood strong enough to carry the weight of the tree crown. However, it is also the compound that makes wood pulp brown, so it is removed from all wood pulp except that used to make brown paper and some cardboards. HO CH CHCH2OH HO CH CHCH2OH CH3O trans-p-coumarol trans-coniferol IV-Forestry-C-Pulp and Paper-2 CH3O HO CH CHCH2OH CH3O trans-sinapol THE MANUFACTURING PROCESS The process whereby timber is converted into paper involves six steps. The first four convert the logs into a mass of cellulose fibres with some residual lignin using a mixture of physical and chemical processes. This pulp is then bleached to remove the remaining lignin and finally spread out into smooth, pressed sheets (often with chemicals added to provide particular properties such as colour or water resistance). For some papers (e.g. cardboards and 'brown paper') the bleaching step is unnecessary, but all white and coloured papers require bleaching. Step 1 - Wood preparation Wood is delivered to the kraft mill in one of two ways: whole logs and sawmill chips (residuals from sawmills). The logs have their bark removed, either by passing through a drum debarker or by being treated in a hydraulic debarker. The drum debarker, which consists of a slightly inclined, rotating drum is best suited to small diameter logs. The hydraulic debarker, which uses high pressure water jets, can handle large diameter logs. The removed bark is a good fuel, and is normally burnt in a boiler for generating steam. After debarking, the logs are chipped by multi knife chippers into suitable sized pieces, and are then screened to remove overlarge chips. The thickness of the chips is the most important parameter, as this determines the speed and the thoroughness of the impregnation of the cooking chemicals into the wood chip. Neither debarking nor chipping are usually necessary for sawmill chips. Step 2 - Cooking The "cooking process" is where the main part of the delignification takes place. Here the chips are mixed with "white liquor" (a solution of sodium hydroxide and sodium sulphide), heated to increase the reaction rate and then disintegrated into fibres by 'blowing' - subjecting them to a sudden decrease in pressure. Typically some 150 kg of NaOH and 50 kg of Na2S are required per tonne of dry wood. This process is, like any chemical reaction, affected by time, temperature and concentration of chemical reactants. Time and temperature can be traded off against each other to a certain extent, but to achieve reasonable cooking times it is necessary to have temperatures of about 150 - 165oC, so pressure cookers are used. However, if the temperature is too high then the chips are delignified unevenly, so a balance must be achieved. The kinetics of the kraft pulping is quite well understood, but the reaction is heterogenous and therefore difficult to examine. To determine when to interrupt the cooking, a model relating time, temperature and cooking chemical charge is used. The degree of delignification is the most important parameter for determining pulp quality, and is normally IV-Forestry-C-Pulp and Paper-3 expressed in what is called a "Kappa number". This number is directly related to the amount of lignin still remaining in the cooked pulp. There are two different cooking systems; batch and continuous. In batch cooking, chips and white liquor are charged to a pressure vessel and are then heated with steam to a set temperature for a set time. When the correct delignification has been achieved, the cook is "blown" (the pressure is suddenly released so that the cooked chips disintegrate into fibres). In the continuous process, chips and white liquor are fed continuously to the top of a tall pressure vessel. The chips move down the 'digester' by gravity (as a plug) to be finally blown from the bottom of the vessel. The cooking time cannot be varied in this case (it is set by the production rate) and only the temperature and the chemical charge can be controlled. Many developments have taken place during the last decade to improve the 'science' of kraft pulping. The challenge has been to remove as much of the lignin as possible with out degrading the cellulose and without losing too much yield. It is now well known that the concentrations of NaOH, Na2S and dissolved lignin during the various phases of the delignification are of crucial importance for the pulp strength. Generally speaking, it is desirable to have a high sulphide concentration in the beginning of the cook, a low lignin concentration in the liquid phase towards the end of the cook, and an even alkali concentration during most parts of the cook. How to achieve this in practice under conditions of high temperature and high pressures has been a challenge, and much development is still going on. Step 3 - Pulp washing Because of the high amounts of chemicals used in the cooking wood in kraft pulping, the recovery of the chemicals is of crucial importance.

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